Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

NDP slam Liberals for inaction on housing shortfalls, grocer price … – Canada’s National Observer

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh visited Iqaluit on Friday alongside Nunavut MP Lori Idlout to meet with territorial politicians about the housing and cost-of-living crises.

Singh slammed the Liberals, citing in a press release that they are abandoning Nunavut and the North on essential issues like the territorys housing crisis and price-gouging by the North West Company.

In March 2022, the waitlist for public housing across Nunavut was 3,021 people. Two weeks ago, the Liberals announced an investment to build 21 housing units. The federal government is not meeting the needs of Nunavut, the press release added.

The federal government committed to close the infrastructure gap by 2030 by aggressively investing in housing for Indigenous communities, which are at times plagued by long waitlists and overcrowded homes. In February, the NDP found it would take between 58 and 141 years to hit that goal, according to figures the party obtained at the time.

Its unclear what the Liberal governments fall economic statement, due in a few weeks, will signal about Ottawas commitment on housing. In August, Finance Canada asked all cabinet ministers to find around $15 billion in spending cuts ahead of the statement.

Ottawas austerity measures will not touch Indigenous infrastructure spending moving forward, Indigenous Services Canada Minister Patty Hajdu told Canadas National Observer in a previous interview.

Meanwhile, grocery retailers supplying food to dozens of Canada's most food-insecure communities, like Nunavut, are pocketing over half of a federal subsidy to reduce hunger, researchers reported in September. In Nunavut alone, nearly half of households can't afford enough to eat.

The $131-million annual Nutrition North subsidy is paid directly to most grocery retailers serving over 120 remote northern communities from Labrador to Yukon. The biggest retailer in northern Canada, the North West Company, reported $125 million in net income last year. It receives over half of the Nutrition North subsidy.

While Liberals are busy protecting the profits of the North West Company, the NDP is fighting to lower food prices for everyone, the NDP press release said.

With files from Marc Fawcett-Atkinson

Matteo Cimellaro / Canadas National Observer / Local Journalism Initiative

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NDP slam Liberals for inaction on housing shortfalls, grocer price ... - Canada's National Observer

Uzelman: The Federal Liberals and the chasm between housing … – Houston Today

~BW Uzelman

The housing affordability crisis is a serious and pervasive problem. Ontario and British Columbia have most actively addressed the issue, but all provincial governments have taken too long to react.

The federal government has been even more tardy. The Liberals proposed the $4 billion Housing Accelerator Fund in the election campaign in August of 2021. The Accelerator program was unsuitably named; it was eight months into the Liberals mandate before it was introduced in the 2022 Budget, 14 more months for the application portal to open and yet another three months for the first agreement with a municipality. In those 25 months, the housing shortage burgeoned into a severe housing deficit.

The Fraser Institute has just released a housing study. Josef Filipowicz, senior fellow at the institute, wrote, Never in the past half-century has population growth been so much higher than housing completions in so many parts of the country than in 2022.

Canadas housing crisis is a result of escalating demand and stagnating supply. A rapidly growing population has fueled demand, while government policy deficiencies have depressed housing construction. The Liberal government, first progressively, and in 2022 massively, increased the number of immigrants, foreign workers and foreign students admitted to the country. As well, governments at both levels have focused on helping buyers get into the housing market. These actions have pumped up demand, while government measures to supplement supply were absent.

Predictably, both housing availability and housing affordability have strikingly deteriorated. As more people competed for too few homes, vacancy rates (in the post-pandemic period in particular) have neared zero in many provinces, and home prices and rent have risen substantially. High interest rates have further driven up housing costs. The CMHC estimates that 5.8 million homes will have to be built by 2030 to restore the levels of affordability existing in 2003/2004.

The Fraser Institute research compares annual population growth with housing completions in the previous year. Filipowiczs data (garnered from Statistics Canada) shows from that from 1972 to the mid-2010s, population growth was one to two people per housing unit completed. From the mid-2010s to 2021, it was two to three people per completion, the only exception being the pandemic year of 2020. In 2022, population growth was a whopping 4.7 times the level of housing completions.

With the policies the federal Liberals had introduced, and had not introduced, the market was destined to fail. Only when public and opposition party pressure peaked and when the Liberals trailed the Conservatives by double digits in the polls, did they get serious about spurring housing supply. Then, in the autumn, there was a flurry of Housing Accelerator Fund agreements with municipalities, and the government soon created a GST exemption for new rental housing projects. These are the correct policy responses, but the Liberals had to be forced to deliver them, and they arrived much too late to alleviate the acute housing shortages and affordability problems visited on Canadians from 2021 through 2023.

PM Trudeau, earlier in 2023, drew criticism for stating that provision of housing is largely a provincial responsibility. He was correct. Housing primarily falls within provincial jurisdiction. But it is the federal government which controls the admission of immigrants and foreign workers and students. The Liberals have steadily increased admissions since 2015, and in 2022 they more than doubled the 2021 number, admitting over 1 million people. If the government was determined to engineer this escalation, it had a responsibility to help solve the pan-Canadian housing shortage. It has neglected this duty far too long.

It will not be the first time a federal government has intervened to develop housing. But the Liberals need to be careful to respect provincial jurisdiction. The GST exemption is the correct tool in this regard. It will do little to distort provincial policy, and will likely support the targets of provincial programs.

Benjamin Dachis of the C.D. Howe Institute urges the federal government to tread lightly with Accelerator funding. He writes, Direct intervention on city-by-city zoning decisions would be unwise and would likely only worsen the housing crisis. BC and Ontario already develop municipal housing targets and monitor achievement. Dachis suggests that the federal and provincial governments develop the targets together, and award Accelerator funding only to those meeting the targets. This is smart policy. It would avoid conflict between federal and provincial criteria and protect provincial jurisdiction.

Ottawa should also seriously consider stemming population growth for a time, until housing supply catches up with demand. This is unfortunate, but is now necessary. Lastly, all provinces would be wise to emulate the Ontario and BC models to boost housing supply. Those or similar policies are essential.

bruce

Bruce W Uzelman

I attended the University of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon.I obtained a Bachelor of Arts, Advanced with majors in Economics and Political Science in 1982.

I have maintained a healthy interest in politics throughout my adult years, and wish to put that and my research skills to work as a political columnist.

Contact: urbangeneral@shaw.ca

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Uzelman: The Federal Liberals and the chasm between housing ... - Houston Today

Liberals name staffer, ex-candidate as by-election pick – Shepparton News

The Victorian Liberals met on Wednesday night to preselect a candidate for the November 18 poll to replace former premier Daniel Andrews as Mulgrave MP.

Courtney Mann emerged as the winner, beating out three other preselection nominees.

Mr Mann ran as the Liberal candidate for Mulgrave at the 2010 state election and is a senior policy adviser in Mr Pesutto's office.

He also has previous experience as an adviser in the Baillieu/Napthine Victorian coalition governments.

Mr Pesutto said Mr Mann had deep roots in the electorate, having grown up in Mulgrave and lived there for 25 years.

"He is highly respected across the party and, if elected, would provide a strong voice for the people of Mulgrave in the Victorian parliament," he said in a statement.

Labor holds the seat on a healthy 10.2 per cent two-party-preferred margin but it could be reduced following the retirement of Mr Andrews last month after more than 20 years as the local member.

Dandenong mayor Eden Foster, who grew up within Mulgrave's suburbs of Noble Park and Springvale, has been locked in as Labor's pick to succeed him.

Ms Foster's fellow councillor Rhonda Garad was preselected as the Victorian Greens' candidate.

Ian Cook, who is suing the Victorian health department after he was ordered to shut his catering business over the listeriosis-linked death of an elderly woman, confirmed he would recontest the seat after collecting the second most first-preference votes last year.

Nominations for the Mulgrave by-election close next week.

It will be the second Victorian state by-election this year after the Liberals retained Warrandyte in Melbourne's northeast following the retirement of veteran MP Ryan Smith, in a poll Labor did not contest.

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Liberals name staffer, ex-candidate as by-election pick - Shepparton News

Germany’s Greens and Liberals call for action on immigration as far-right strengthens – POLITICO Europe

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BERLIN You know fears over immigration and the rise of the far-right are boiling over in Germany when even the Greens are calling for a crackdown on illegal asylum seekers.

In a remarkable intervention on Monday, Green co-chair Ricarda Lang whose party is usually known for advocating a moderate course on migration criticized key officials from her two coalition partners for not doing enough to ensure that asylum seekers without a valid reason to stay, such as fleeing a warzone, are being sent back to their home countries.

Theres no doubt the political temperature is rising fast in Germany. A poll published Tuesday showed that the anti-immigration Alternative for Germany party has become the strongest political force in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, making it the fourth eastern German state after Brandenburg, Thuringia and Saxony in which the far-right is leading in polls. This is particularly spooking established parties as the latter three states are heading to the polls in September next year, raising the possibility that the AfD might, for the first time, win power at state level.

The Greens Lang lashed out at Interior Minister Nancy Faeser, who is from Chancellor Olaf Scholzs Social Democratic Party (SPD), and Germanys special envoy for immigration, Joachim Stamp from the liberal Free Democratic Party (FDP), saying that they must finally make progress on repatriation agreements with non-EU countries to facilitate the deportations. The government must act to avoid more and more people arriving, Lang said.

These unusual remarks from a senior Green politician come as the FDP of Finance Minister Christian Lindner on Monday adopted a position paper vowing to cut social payments for asylum seekers. The FDP also wants to convince its coalition partners to declare Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria as safe countries of origin, which would make it easier to send asylum seekers from those countries back home.

These actions highlight the extent to which Germanys ruling coalition of the SPD, FDP and Greens is beginning to panic as migration numbers keep rising in August alone, about 15,100 illegal border crossings were registered, marking a 40 percent increase compared to July and an increasing number of Germans are turning toward the AfD.

German President Frank-Walter SteinmeierwarnedWednesday that Germany is at breaking point, as 162,000 people applied for asylum in the country within the first half of the year. Thats more than a third of all applications within the EU, Steinmeier added in an interview with Italys Corriere della Sera.

While the AfD has not made a breakthrough at a state level, it took power at smaller district levels for the first time when it won a council election in Thuringia in June and notched up a mayoral election win in Saxony-Anhalt in July.

Although the AfD is building support on the back of many factors inflation, high energy prices and the governments poor handling of a controversial heating law it is the growing influx of asylum seekers that is seen as its main catalyst.

Such a party is getting stronger when problems are not being solved, Friedrich Merz, the leader of Germanys center-right Christian Democratic Union (CDU), the main opposition party, said last week in reference to the immigration debate. He added cities and municipalities in Germany are hopelessly overwhelmed by the growing numbers of asylum seekers.

The AfD has also surged in national polls from just 14 percent at the beginning of the year to 22 percent now, according to an average of national polls compiled by POLITICOs Poll of Polls. That puts it as the countrys second-most popular party after the conservative alliance of the CDU with the Christian Social Union, which has 27 percent support. Scholzs SPD is trailing on 17 percent.

For more polling data from across Europe visit POLITICO Poll of Polls.

The AfD is also on the rise in the western German states of Hesse and Bavaria, which will head to the polls in less than three weeks, on October 8.

In Bavaria, the AfDs ascent is partly contained by the popular right-wing Free Voters party, which even managed to increase its standing in the influential southern state following a Nazi leaflet scandal involving its leading candidate Hubert Aiwanger.

In Hesse, however, the far-right party is making strong gains. Latest polls in the state, which is home to the banking hub of Frankfurt, indicate that the AfD is closing in on the SPD, which is particularly damning as the Social Democrats nominated Faeser, the interior minister, as their lead candidate in Hesse, hoping that her prominence would help the party to win the election against the incumbent CDU Premier Boris Rhein.

Instead, Faeser is getting hammered in the election campaign by the far-right, which accuses her of failing on the immigration front as interior minister a job that Faeser has kept while running in Hesse, and which she wants to keep in case she loses the state election.

It isnt helping Faeser that even the widely respected former German President Joachim Gauck criticized the government and called for more radical solutions.

The measures taken so far have not been sufficient to remedy the loss of control that has obviously occurred, the former president told public broadcaster ZDF on Sunday.

That means we have to discover margins [for maneuver] that are initially unappealing to us because they sound inhumane, added former Lutheran pastor Gauck, as he argued in favor of introducing a limitation strategy to curb the numbers of asylum seekers.

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Germany's Greens and Liberals call for action on immigration as far-right strengthens - POLITICO Europe

Do Liberals Think the Supreme Court Will Save Us From Trump? – New York Magazine

Photo: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

If you are a student of very recent legal history, you might have found yourself scratching your head in recent weeks, as some commentators on the left and the anti-Trump right have joined forced in a dubious, long-shot effort to argue that Donald Trump is constitutionally ineligible to run for reelection. They want to use lawsuits to disqualify Trump from state ballots before next years elections on a theory that centers on a largely forgotten section of the 14th Amendment to punish Trumps effort to overturn the 2020 election results. It sounds a lot like One Neat Trick that could get rid of Trump once and for all, but the boosterism has bordered on nave and at times disingenuous. The impulse reflects a familiar reflex among some of Trumps political opponents to root for a legal miracle some sort of deus ex machina that might rid them of Trump without doing the hard work of winning an election.

But reality requires us to acknowledge that this dispute, if it has any chance of success, will ultimately end up in the Supreme Court. And no one, least of all liberals, should assume that they will save the country from Trump.

The underlying legal question is whether the 14th Amendment of the Constitution, adopted in 1868 in the wake of the Civil War, disqualifies Trump from being president again. The relevant text precludes anyone who once served as an officer of the United States from holding any office in the government if they have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United States or have given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. Congress may remove such disability if two-thirds of each chamber agree to do so.

The public debate over the applicability of the amendment kicked into high gear following the release last month of a law-review article written by William Baude and Michael Stokes Paulsen, two conservative constitutional law professors who argue that, under an originalist interpretation of the provision, Trump is barred from running for office. The notion picked up steam in some quarters of the press, as well as an endorsement from two prominent legal thinkers, but it has since drawn vocal objections from the right on legal, political, and policy grounds. Just this month, one early and prominent supporter of the effort a co-founder of the Federalist Society who had initially called the article a tour de force changed his mind.

The originalist framework can lead its adherents to some strange places, particularly if they have already made up their minds about what the result should be. Baude and Paulsen, for instance, breeze past two statutes from the late 1800s not that long after the 14th Amendment went into effect that complicate their analysis, but they produce no meaningful or contemporaneous historical evidence to support their conclusions.

Somewhat amusingly, the authors go to great lengths to shore up their position against the very unhelpful fact that it was rejected the year after the 14th Amendment was adopted. Chief Justice Salmon Chase issued a decision that dismissed the idea that the provision created a sweeping and self-executing prohibition on public office and concluded that Congress had to pass legislation to implement it. Chase wrote the opinion while riding circuit, so it is not the law of the Supreme Court, but under ordinary circumstances, this would seem to be pretty devastating for originalist legal scholars. After all, are they better positioned to conclude that Chases interpretation does not hold up as an original matter their words than a sitting Chief Justice who was alive at the time and explicitly contemplated the question? There are also plenty of legitimately unsettled questions concerning the application of the 14th Amendment to Trump, including whether the president is himself an officer of the United States or if instead that phrase applies only to subordinate officials in the government.

Baude and Paulsen argue that the 14th Amendment can and should be enforced by every official, state or federal, who judges qualifications, but that interpretation of the law is also running into some problems this time among government officials who are actually alive. Democratic secretaries of state are publicly disavowing the idea that they can keep Trump off the ballot unilaterally and instead want to kick the issue to the courts. Republican Brad Raffensperger of Georgia, perhaps the countrys most famous and well-regarded secretary of state thanks to Trump, has also come out against the idea.

As of now, there are two lawsuits that have been filed by liberal groups seeking to keep Trump off the ballot in Colorado and Minnesota. If one of these lawsuits or others that are likely to be filed actually results in Trump being removed from a states ballot, we can safely assume that the case will make its way to the Supreme Court for the final word.

If you hold the sitting Supreme Court in low regard as most of the country now does you have probably already stopped counting on them to do the right thing, whatever you may think it is. After all, until last year, the Courts decisions had established a right to abortion in this country, had repeatedly upheld the use of affirmative action in higher education, and had made clear that businesses open to the public cannot discriminate against members of protected classes, including same-sex couples. None of those things is true anymore thanks to the conservative supermajority on the Court that was installed by Trump.

Those decisions, which were all wrong on the merits, rightly infuriated many liberals, and calls for reform of the high court on the left are now commonplace (despite being ignored by the White House). Meanwhile, a series of ethics controversies in recent months concerning ultraconservative justices Samuel Alito and Clarence Thomas have generated more public criticism, with little evident concern on the part of Chief Justice John Roberts or his conservative colleagues.

All of this, as a practical matter, is highly relevant to the effort to remove Trump from the ballot.

For one thing, even assuming that there was an airtight case on originalist grounds, it would be unwise to assume that it will actually sway votes among the conservative justices. Whatever one makes of originalism as an academic pursuit, it is not practiced by conservative justices in anything resembling a legitimately principled or objective manner. All too often, originalism in the courts is little more than an outcome-driven interpretive method that somehow magically almost always aligns with the political and policy prerogatives of the Republican Party.

Then there are problems of math and individual psychology. Very crudely, let us assume for the sake of argument that the three liberal justices would support disqualifying Trump if not on strictly originalist grounds, then using contemporary methods of liberal constitutional interpretation that might lead to the same result following serious examination. At the same time, we can probably safely assume that Alito and Thomas, who seem to define their judicial outlooks in opposition to anything that liberals want, would oppose that result.

That would mean that liberals would need to attract two of the four remaining conservative justices in order to cobble together a majority. Three of those justices (Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barrett) were appointed by Trump, but disqualifying him under the 14th Amendment would require them to directly confront the fact that their legacies are closely intertwined with his that they are on the Court issuing rulings for decades to come because a historically awful president put them there. Nothing I have seen from them suggests to me that they have the self-awareness, humility, or intellectual fortitude to do this.

Three justices in this group (Roberts, Kavanaugh, and Barrett) also share the dubious distinction of having worked for Republicans on the litigation in Bush v. Gore, when conservatives on the Supreme Court used a deeply flawed and tendentious analysis to put George W. Bush in the White House. (It is no mere coincidence that they ended up on the Supreme Court: Working on that litigation was a major career boost for young Republican lawyers.) Perhaps some of these justices will turn out to surprise us if the question of Trumps eligibility reaches them, but my general operating assumption is that this is a group of people who are perfectly content to contort the legal system in service of the Republican Partys interests when the stakes are high, particularly if those interests align with their own.

It was one thing for them to have rejected Trumps various legal efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the courts after he lost, but it would be another thing entirely for them to prevent him from running altogether, particularly when most Republican politicians and Republican voters strongly support his candidacy. For this to work, at a bare minimum, a comprehensive and compelling legal argument with broad ideological appeal and robust bipartisan support would likely need to come together.

That may emerge as litigation proceeds, and as scholars and lawyers continue to debate and refine their ideas, but it is not here yet. For now, Trumps opponents need to focus on beating him the old-fashioned way at the ballot box.

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Do Liberals Think the Supreme Court Will Save Us From Trump? - New York Magazine